Home / Bolton, Robert Jr. The History of the Several Towns, Manors, and Patents of the County of Westchester, from its First Settlement to the Present Time, Vol. I. New York: Charles F. Roper, 1881. Revised posthumous edition. / Passage

The History of the Several Towns, Manors, and Patents of the County of Westchester (1881 revised edition, Vol. I)

Bolton, Robert Jr. The History of the Several Towns, Manors, and Patents of the County of Westchester, from its First Settlement to the Present Time, Vol. I. New York: Charles F. Roper, 1881. Revised posthumous edition. 295 words

On their own deserved monuments,) He intercepted the British spy, Andre : Poor Himself He disdained to acquire wealth by the sacrifice of

HIS COUNTRY.

Rejecting the temptation of great rewards He conveyed his prisoner to the American camp ; And

By this act of noble self-denial. The treason of Arnold was detected, The designs of the enemy baffled ; West Point and the American Armj* saved; And these United States, Now by the grace of God. Free and Independent, Rescued from most imminent peril.

The fourth side of the pedestal bears the following inscription :

TUB COKPOKATION

Of the City of New York, Erected this Tomb, As memorial Sacred to PUBLIC GRATITUDE.

The whole being completed with the exception of placing the cone' on the pedestal, on the morning of the twenty -second of November, eighteen hundred and twenty-seven, the corporation proceeded in the steamboat Sandusky, to Peekskill, where they arrived at one o'clock, and were met by the Committee of Arrangements,0 and a large concourse of

a Generals Pierre van Cortlandt and Philip van Cortlandt, Daniel W. Birdsall. St. John Constant, Ward B. Howard, Beujaniia Dyckiuan, Doctor Peter Goetchius, James Jiaudeville, and Doctor Samuel Strang.

THE TOWN OF CORTLANDT.

the inhabitants of Westchester County, who had come to assist in the last honors, to the memory of their fellow citizen. Among them were many aged and venerable men, who passed through the perils of the revolution and shared its dangers with the deceased.

A procession was formed to the church yard, where the monument stands, about two and a half miles from the village of Peekskill; ami the column being lowered to its place on the pedestal, William Paulding, mayor of the city of New York, addressed the assembled citizens as follows :